Portraitist and still photographer, Enrico De Luigi, aka Chico, was born in Rimini in 1966. He began his career in Milan in the late 80s and has collaborated with the most prestigious national and international magazines such as GQ, Vanity Fair , Rolling Stone, Riders, Sportweek. He has won awards (such as the one for the best set photography attributed to a shot on the set of Caos calmo, an intense black and white with Nanni Moretti and Valeria Golino), photographed in Polaroid 50×60 actors and directors at the Venice and Berlin Film Festivals , has been collaborating for years with Fandango (he has just finished The Last Earthman, the film debut of the cartoonist Gipi which will be presented at the next Venice Film Festival). He worked as a super 8 operator on "Super 8 stories" by Emir Kusturica, the documentary with the deeds of the director's rock band. The interest and curiosity for human expression have led Enrico to constantly explore other worlds with an anthropological eye: naturalistic expression of great impact that reveals a deeper meaning and a natural revelation of the subject itself. / Portrait and still photographer Enrico De Luigi, aka Chico, was born in Rimini in 1966. He began his career in Milan in the late 1980s and has collaborated with the most prestigious national and international magazines such as GQ, Vanity Fair , Rolling Stone, Riders, Sportweek. He has won awards (such as the one for best stage photography attributed to a shot on the set of Chaos calmo, an intense black and white with Nanni Moretti and Valeria Golino), photographed in Polaroid 50 × 60 actors and directors at the Venice and Berlin Festivals, has been collaborating for years with Fandango (he has just finished L'ultimo terrestri, the film debut of the cartoonist Gipi which will be presented at the next Venice Film Festival). He worked as super 8 operator on Emir Kusturica's “Super 8 stories”, the documentary featuring the exploits of the director's rock band. The interest and curiosity for human expression led Enrico to constantly explore other worlds with an anthropological eye: a naturalistic expression of great impact that reveals a deeper meaning and a natural revelation of the subject itself.